Metamorphic
Senior Member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2008
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- California
How about staying with your company that took you under their wings and trained you? Newbs can't do that. Once they get licensed, bam their off on their on.
That says it all.![]()
This is why fees are at $175. Wow. And the AMCs think the above is customary and reasonable?
The problem is is that under the AMC model at least, there's no advantage to having a partner, and not having a boss is one of the things that makes appraising desirable. If you're willing to risk the ire of the MLS board you can maybe save a little by sharing a login. But you need your own EnO, the AMC makes you sign up under your own name and credentials. Joining somebody else's business is just more complications for no more money and no more work. Maybe it would be different if the person you trained with had a big legal practice or something like that, but that's the exception rather than the rule.
The appraiser training system is so profoundly dysfunctional that I think its beyond saving short of a top to bottom overhaul. The class work is completely detached from the reality of the job and its given at time when the trainee doesn't know enough about the business to pluck the few nuggets of info that are potentially valuable, and all the real training is turned over to somebody who may or may not be a good teacher, may or may not be a good appraiser, who is totally unregulated or supervised, who has no specific standards of performance, who may or may not have a practice that will offer sufficient opportunity to produce a well rounded student.
What they really need to do is create a separate license endorsement for appraiser's who are qualified to train with appropriate course work and testing. The carrot that would make this worth while would be that at some point in the progression of the trainee, the trainee could become authorized to inspect solo, and towards the end could do non-complex jobs solo.